Are billion-dollar asset managers also turning to selling courses?
Recently, a well-known female executive from a private equity firm suddenly launched a paid knowledge course, which was quite unexpected. Someone managing hundreds of millions in funds now starting to sell investment insights—this contrast is quite striking.
The course model is very cliché: personal IP + professionally edited photos + promotional copy. Coupled with marketing slogans like "Just launched yesterday, earning over 5 million in 2 days," bombarding audiences with such data to create a herd mentality of "Even experts are doing this."
Honestly, this reflects a phenomenon in the current investment circle: top-tier institutional managers are gradually realizing that while their management scale has a ceiling, the potential of paid knowledge is limitless. Courses priced from a few thousand to tens of thousands, with extremely low costs, quick conversions, difficult repeat purchases, but high topicality.
Shifting from asset management to content monetization seems like a new trend, but in reality, it’s a product of the industry’s increasing internal competition. After all, telling stories solely based on investment returns is less effective than directly selling methodology.
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PuzzledScholar
· 13h ago
Breaking 5 million? So if you can't manage the money, you start managing the mind. This business is much easier than investing.
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FallingLeaf
· 13h ago
Haha, another course seller is here. They really know how to make money.
Spending hundreds of millions isn't enough; they have to harvest the chives.
It's called paid knowledge, but frankly, it's just selling anxiety.
5 million in two days? I don't believe you, damn it.
The investment circle is now hopeless; everyone is turning into marketing accounts.
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P2ENotWorking
· 13h ago
Selling courses with this routine is really damn cliché, 5 million in two days? That's a joke.
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NestedFox
· 13h ago
These days, even billion-dollar valuations are starting to cut the leeks, truly impressive.
Are billion-dollar asset managers also turning to selling courses?
Recently, a well-known female executive from a private equity firm suddenly launched a paid knowledge course, which was quite unexpected. Someone managing hundreds of millions in funds now starting to sell investment insights—this contrast is quite striking.
The course model is very cliché: personal IP + professionally edited photos + promotional copy. Coupled with marketing slogans like "Just launched yesterday, earning over 5 million in 2 days," bombarding audiences with such data to create a herd mentality of "Even experts are doing this."
Honestly, this reflects a phenomenon in the current investment circle: top-tier institutional managers are gradually realizing that while their management scale has a ceiling, the potential of paid knowledge is limitless. Courses priced from a few thousand to tens of thousands, with extremely low costs, quick conversions, difficult repeat purchases, but high topicality.
Shifting from asset management to content monetization seems like a new trend, but in reality, it’s a product of the industry’s increasing internal competition. After all, telling stories solely based on investment returns is less effective than directly selling methodology.